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What Will You Give Up for Your Brother? Christian Rights and the Right to Sacrifice Yourself

You are confined to a prison cell, dressed in black and white striped pajamas and everything. You have suffered in confinement for a long time and have been straining under the weight of prison life. One shiny day, the Warden comes to your cell and takes out his keys, opens the door and sets you free. Go out of that place and live a life of freedom, he says.

Celebration time, right? We are going to party like it’s 1999. You are free and no one is ever going to put you back in the chains of that imprisonment! Woohoo!

But as the Warden is unlocking your giant iron ball and chain (yes, you are the Monopoly guy in prison now), you realize that your young child who has been in prison with you this whole time is still stuck in the cell. She has also been set free by the warden, the chains are removed and the door is open but because of the damage that the time in prison has done to her, she doesn’t feel comfortable anywhere but in that cell.

She is not willing to leave with you – even though you both are free to leave, are innocent and have the right to just walk away. That child is not leaving and you cannot make her. (For those wondering children in prison was a common occurrence until recent history and still is common in places like North Korea)

What would you do? As a parent who loves that child with every fiber of your being, would you ever abandon her in that cell by herself imprisoned? Would you ever just say to that immature child – well, I have my rights so see you later, you are on your own?

Of course not, that would be unloving and irresponsible. It is just not what a good parent would ever do and still be a good parent. Your liberty as a parent would be secondary to doing what is good for that child.

Freedom is nowhere near as important as the fate of that child.

Are you saying now, well, that is an interesting scenario, preacher man, but what does this have to do with me, I am not in prison and my children are currently chasing the neighbor’s cat, not yet in prison…yet.

I was reading 1 Corinthians 8, where Paul discusses Christian liberty and it struck me how often we tend to miss what he is saying in that passage in our desire to argue about what we can or can’t do as Christians. I can listen to speed metal, I can drink alcohol, I can watch Game of Thrones, it is not sinful and therefore my right and no one is going to tell me otherwise we say. The Bible’s message seems to be quite a bit different and seems to be the same conclusion as the child in prison hypothetical.

As a Christian our freedom is so much less important than the fate of our more immature brothers and sisters in Christ.

If you are familiar with the passage, you know that Paul is discussing whether the church members in Corinth are allowed to eat meat sacrificed in pagan temple ceremonies. The meat from the temple was cheaper and some of the Christians were taking advantage of that fact and eating goats or sheep that had been dedicated and sacrificed to the Goddess Diana, for example.

Other believers were less sure and found the idea troublesome, possibly because they had just come out of that pagan religion. If one day you were getting drunk, sleeping with temple prostitutes and sacrificing in the temple of Diana and then days after being saved, you saw your church mates drinking wine and eating the same meat you had been sacrificing a few days prior, it certainly would be a confusing message.

In discussing this issue, Paul very clearly says that believers are allowed to eat such meat since there is no such thing as a false god. Things that don’t exist cannot defile anything and that it actually is a sign of maturity to understand this – all the earth belongs to God.

So I am allowed to take part in all things that are not explicitly sinful in my liberty as a Christian. We often stop here in our analysis.

But, there is a big but here that we often overlook, particularly in American Christianity.

In the context of this debate about whether one should or should not eat such meat, Paul says this in 8:13:

Therefore, if food makes my brother stumble, I will never again eat meat, lest I make my brother stumble.

Never Again, wow!

Paul is allowed to eat meat sacrificed to idols. It is his right as a redeemed Christian to eat whatever he wants, God made that very clear with Peter’s vision in Acts 10. Yet, Paul willingly would give up that right for ever, his whole life, to avoid causing another believer to stumble.

Isn’t that amazing? My fiercely independent American heart shudders at that thought – forego a right for the good of someone else. It seems vaguely like something Che Guevara would say not John Wayne.

This is also not that terribly long after Paul has tried bacon, pork barbecue and hot dogs for the first time, maybe not hot dogs, and he is willing to never eat them again. Something good is refused despite it being good with a full understanding that it is his right to partake it.

Why would Paul do this? This answer is really important.

Not because Jesus has a problem with it.

Not because Paul has a problem with it.

Not because it is bad for Paul.

The reason Paul says no is completely and totally because of the good of another believer. Even though that believer is wrong about their objections to the meat. A believer who is not understanding their freedom in Christ. A believer who may not be listening closely during service. In other words, because of the immaturity of that guy Paul will not eat bacon and it is not a debate. Love compels him to do so.

To Paul, it is the same as the parent outside of the jail cell looking at the child still trapped inside by her own refusal to leave.

Paul in his liberty could run around eating links of sausage like the dogs in old cartoons, one link after the other on a string, but it is inconceivable to him. Paul would never leave that babe in Christ, the weaker brother trapped as he is by his immaturity so that he could run off and celebrate his own freedom. It is just not what a good disciple in Jesus does – it is not what love commands.

We are supposed to love our fellow Christians in a way that is as deep as or deeper than we love our own literal flesh in blood, we are part of Jesus’ family. It is the same sort of love that would not leave the child alone in a jail cell. That sort of love does not flinch at sacrificing rights for the good of brothers or sisters in Christ.

Crazy, isn’t it? It seems so wrong to give up what we have for someone else who could have the same thing if not for their own disobedience. Who in the world would do that…other than Jesus. It is just like Jesus what Jesus did for us.

Paul is just talking about the same sort of sacrifice and same kind of love that caused Jesus to give up all that He is entitled to by divine right to die on the Cross for us.

Paul is just talking about acting like Jesus in our every day life. Willingly giving up what we are entitled to for others. The Son of Man came not to be served, but to serve and give His life as a ransom for many.

So whether we are talking about food, alcohol, clothing, TV shows or any of the other rights that we have as Christians in the world today, are we willing to be like Paul and never again…. watch an R rated movie lest we cause our brother to sin…or never again drink alcohol or never again eat Halal meat lest we cause a brother to sin.

If we are not, why not? Paul and Jesus did it.

No one takes our lives from us, that we have rights is very certain, but do we lay our lives down freely? You know, like our savior did for us.